Monday, September 24, 2007China's performance pipeline is gushing in plain sight
By Shaun AssaelESPN The Magazine

Editor's note: This article appears in the Oct. 8 issue of ESPN The Magazine.

On Thursday, Sept. 20, more than 100 U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents began to fan out across 27 states, knocking down doors in suburban cul-de-sacs and pushing their way into basements and kitchens. Their targets: dozens of home-made drug labs that had taken root in the shadows of schools and supermarkets and now produced and sold steroids, human growth hormone, even Viagra. The owners weren't exactly secretive. One Long Island man had 800,000 doses of raw steroid powder stacked in plain view in his garage, right next to his shiny new Corvette; nearby, a locker housed empty vials and printed address labels for thousands of clients throughout the country. An electrician who was running another lab, in New Jersey, had stashed 40,000 doses in his basement, along with the tub
and centrifuge he used to turn the powder into street-ready drugs. In a third raid, on a Midwestern home, the living room floor was so thick with steroid powder that agents left footprints behind.

By the time "Operation Raw Deal" ran its course four days later, 124 people had been arrested and 56 labs shut down. Hundreds of thousands of intercepted e-mails went into a database of names that the agents promise will lead to more arrests down the line.

A promotional billboard in China promotes the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing, using the official motto, "One World, One Dream."

What links these raids isn't the intended destinations of the drugs -- pro athletes, gym rats, even high school kids -- it's their source: China. Raw Deal represents more than a year of tracing this Mainland-to-Main Street pipeline. In addition to the arrests and seizures made on these shores, DEA agents also identified 37 Chinese factories they blame for juicing most of the underground trade.

It's the latest embarrassment for a Chinese government that is going to remarkable lengths to make sure everything is squeaky-clean for next summer's Olympic Games, in Beijing. An official campaign urges citizens to smile when they meet foreigners. The worst-polluting factories within 30 miles of Beijing will be closed and more than a million cars banished from the roads three months before the opening ceremonies to give the city's sickly orange sky a chance to breathe. Beijing's official Weather Manipulation Office even plans to seed clouds with chemicals that will induce an early rain and guarantee clear skies for the Games.

But it will take more than smiles and blue skies to conceal the tide of Chinese pharmaceuticals that currently feeds the world's underground doping economy. Over the past seven years, the size of China's drug industry has ballooned from $22 billion to an estimated $67 billion. Steroid powders and HGH are a significant chunk of that business, and despite a government-licensing process for drug manufacturers, both are widely available to anyone with an easy-to-get prescription.

Coming clean

Wu Moutian, head of China's Doping Control Center, is already losing sleep over next summer's Olympics, not to mention his government's vow to host the cleanest Games ever. "I never had experience organizing such a big lab," he says.

Don't worry, he'll have help. Lab directors from around the world will fly in to supervise the estimated 4,500 tests Wu expects to conduct. His 5,000-square-meter facility, which is still under construction, will house 150 drug testers and the largest collection of detection machinery ever assembled for a sporting event. "We will be operating -- how do you say in English? -- 24/7," says Wu.

Olympic organizers are counting on him to burnish China's rogue image. Doping rumors have dogged its national teams for years. In 1993, the country's previously unheralded female distance runners set three world records in one week. Their coach, Ma Junren, credited turtle blood and caterpillar fungus, but no one was surprised when, in 2000, he and 27 athletes were banned before the Sydney Games for "suspicious blood test results."

More recently, in August 2006, officers raided a sports camp in the northeastern province of Liaoning, where they found trainers openly injecting students. The refrigerator in the headmaster's office held 300 doses of EPO and 141 bottles of steroids. Zhao Jian, head of the Anti-Doping Commission of the Chinese Olympic Committee, says the bust proves China's seriousness. "If we hear of someone using drugs," he says, "we will show up to their house."

Wu should benefit from a more-sensitive blood test to detect growth hormone, which the World Anti-Doping Agency hopes to debut before Beijing; the test used in Athens in 2004 didn't catch a single user. "Each Olympics has problems," Wu says, "and we will have ours. You can't solve everything in two years. But we will have a lot of help."

-- Shaun Assael

In anticipation of the Olympics, the Beijing Organizing Committee has pledged to conduct more drug tests than any previous host nation has (see Coming Clean, below), and Chinese lawmakers have forbidden anyone from selling or providing doping substances to athletes, coaches or sports federations from any country. But not even the Chinese government can control everything.

In fact, the World Anti-Doping Agency believes Chinese-made growth hormone dominates the international underground doping trade. As one supplements-industry figure with experience in China puts it, "People there will make whatever you want. They will in Eastern Europe too, but the Chinese are better and faster and do it with less hassle."

On a recent trip to Shanghai, we found out just how accommodating these drug companies can be.

It's a sweltering June day, and thousands of drug manufacturers have set up shop at the Shanghai New Exposition Centre for the Convention on Pharmaceutical Ingredients Expo. Factory owners from Beijing to Gansu pour in to what is being billed as "the biggest pharmaceutical ingredients exhibition in the world." They're here to meet Fortune 500 executives who are in the market for raw materials that will become pain medicines and herbal teas and antiviral drugs. Friendly faces and four-color brochures are the eager come on of China's pharmaceutical industry.

By noon, the exhibition hall teems with people; millions of dollars have already changed hands. Under the circumstances, a writer from
The Magazine has no trouble posing as the owner of a sports-nutrition website with a pocketful of cash and a shopping list that could keep an underground lab bustling for months. The list includes kilogram quantities of three popular testosterone and nandrolone decaonate blends that can be turned into deca-durabolin, a bodybuilding favorite.

The expedition starts slowly. At a booth for a Shandong-based subsidiary of a U.K. company, a Chinese hostess takes the list and politely tries to match it against her own. But her British boss intervenes. Glancing at the wrinkled paper, he shoos away the prospective buyer and his translator. "We may not be the best place for you," he says, wary of breaking American laws.

Steroids are a controlled substance in the States, so before a drug company may sell them here, it has to register with the Food and Drug Administration. Buyers must be licensed by the DEA. Anyone with a legitimate need -- doctors, dentists, pharmacies -- may get a license. A sports-related website may not. If a manufacturer sells to an American who doesn't have a proper license, "a crime has been committed as soon as those drugs hit the U.S.," says DEA spokesman Steve Robertson.

Wu Moutian (left) and Zhao Jian promise brighter skies for Beijing.

Still, in an economy in which the average laborer makes $232 a month, a couple of thousand dollars goes a long way. The farther one ventures into the Expo hall, the more it seems the exhibitors are willing to overlook the rules.

Wedged into a long aisle of displays, a young woman from a steroids company based in Hunan province takes our list. "We have all of these," she says. Asked if shipping to the U.S. is a problem, she replies, "Is Federal Express okay? We do it for our other American clients."

Her openness is no anomaly. At the booth of a small company from China's southern Zhejiang province, a young woman quotes the seductive price of about $266 for a kilo of testosterone. That weight can be converted into 10,000 single doses at $12.50 a pop, or $125,000, once it hits the street. "Selling these supplements is more profitable than selling cocaine and less dangerous than selling methamphetamine," says Mark Haskins, an investigator with the New York State Department of Health who has helped to arrest more than two dozen doctors and pharmacists in the past two years for violating drug laws regarding steroids. "You're not dealing with fertilizer or other flammable ingredients. Steroids can be made with relative ease."

Another exporter agrees to sell us stanozolol, the drug that got Ben Johnson stripped of his gold in Seoul and Oriole Rafael Palmeiro
suspended for 10 games. The exporter suggests we use another chemical's name on the shipping label to avoid detection. "They can call it a
million things," says a veteran U.S. drug agent. "The bottom line is, we don't have enough agents to man our import facilities. That's why this stuff is getting in literally by the boatload."

Anatomy of a Blowout

How do you score 72 points in the first quarter of a football game?
Here's how. It's the first-quarter scoring summary from Smith Center High's 83-0 victory against Plainville in the Kansas high school playoffs Tuesday night.

American efforts to stanch the flow have been mixed. At the end of 2005, the DEA scored a major coup with Operation Gear Grinder, which shut down eight Mexican pharmaceutical companies that were swamping the U.S. with high-dose steroids. After 23 people were indicted and several websites shut down, the shelves of border pharmacies in places like Tijuana were suddenly noticeably devoid of 'roids.

But that victory was short-lived. Turns out, the Mexican labs got most of their raw materials from Chinese suppliers. When the middlemen were closed down, the suppliers just began to sell direct. "It created a void," says an agent who worked on the Mexican case. "And that was an opportunity for traffickers and manufacturers from China to play a larger role in the illicit U.S. market."

While the underground steroids trade is profitable, black-market HGH is worth even more: WADA pegs worldwide sales at about $600 million. Up to $480 million of that comes from China.

The FDA has approved HGH to treat children and adults with growth hormone deficiency and AIDS patients with wasting syndrome. But many antiaging clinics -- like the one that supplied MLB first baseman David Segui -- prescribe it for off-label uses such as reversing the hormone deficiencies that are a by-product of growing older.

One of the most popular HGH formulations is made by a Chinese chemist named Jin Lei. In the early 1990s, while receiving his Ph.D. at the University of California at San Francisco, Jin learned to make synthetic HGH. After he returned to his native China, he opened his own government-licensed company north of Beijing. He called his company Gene Science, or GenSci, and named its most successful product after himself: Jintropin.

Jin portrays himself as a pharmaceutical patriot who sells low-cost HGH to Chinese patients who need it. That doesn't stop him from also shrewdly courting the sports world. This pitch appears on the GenSci website: "HGH also strengthens and heals connective tissues, cartilage and tendons. These uses are what make it so attractive to athletes in all sports, and in bodybuilding in particular."

Because Jintropin costs a fraction of what American- and European-made versions do, its following has grown rapidly, expanding beyond the bodybuilding and medical worlds. In February, Sylvester Stallone was stopped and detained while trying to enter Australia without a prescription for the 48 vials of Jintropin he was carrying. At about the same time, the FDA added GenSci to a special watch list of companies with products that can be turned away at the border. In response, Jin quickly updated his site with a stark English-language declaration that GenSci does not ship to the States.

Judging from the elaborately constructed GenSci booth at the Shanghai Expo, the retrenchment has not hurt business. A gilded, noodle-shape sculpture rises from the booth's center, representing a strand of DNA. Surrounding it, half a dozen rotating displays boast that GenSci is the biggest biotech company in China.

Putting to the test GenSci's promise not to ship to the U.S., we approach a woman whose business card identifies her as the company's "Director of Regulatory Affairs." Is she willing to fulfill an order for a U.S. sports-related Web site? The woman says U.S. sales have stopped. But after a few minutes of conversation, she warms up. "I have someone who does this whom I have to talk to," she says. "If he says it is possible, I will then have to talk to the big boss, our CEO." That would be Jin.

In order to photograph samples of GenSci's popular HGH formulation, Jintropin . . .

We don't pursue the request. There are plenty of other places to go. A former employee of GenSci reportedly left the company recently to open a rival plant that now supplies brokers around the world, including in the U.S. And an article in the small but influential bodybuilding magazine Body of Science reports that at least seven other manufacturers in China currently make HGH.

One of those companies is working the far end of the Expo. A corkboard display of molecular diagrams lends the look of a high school science project. A salesman who introduces himself as "Jerry" nods when he comes across HGH on our shopping list. "Our factory makes this," he says in crisp English. Then he adds, "Your government is very strict. You should not place too large an order, because it might be dangerous."

In a subsequent e-mail, Jerry is explicit about how a transaction could work. "Our most competitive price is $1.88/IU," he writes before leaving no doubt that he knows about American law. "We need to change the real product name for express," he continues. "If you need the goods, for example, we can use 'watermelon extract.' "

... a Magazine photographer first asked to purchase the drug at a local Beijing pharmacy, but was refused because he did not have a prescription ...

It is "watermelon extract" like Jerry's that winds up online and in American pharmacies. Haskins, the New York investigator, spent the past year investigating web shops that import raw somatropin powder from China and mix it into sellable doses of growth hormone (see The HGH Connection, page 93). Signature Pharmacy in Orlando reportedly sold $150,000 worth of testosterone and HGH to Richard Rydze, a doctor on the Steelers staff, and filled a yearlong HGH prescription for Cardinals pitcher-turned-slugger Rick Ankiel in 2004. (Rydze denies supplying any Steelers, and Ankiel had a doctor's prescription for his HGH.) Records also show that Signature served Patriots safety Rodney Harrison, who was suspended for the first four games of this season for using HGH. A second pharmacy, in Mobile, Ala., reportedly sold HGH to boxer Evander Holyfield and Angels outfielder Gary Matthews. (Both deny using HGH.)

... the situation was quickly remedied when the photographer went to a nearby hospital and requested a prescription for HGH, which he was given immediately, no questions asked.

It's unclear how effective Operation Raw Deal will be at closing off the spigot from China. "This will make a difference, but let's put it in perspective," says San Diego-based DEA agent Dan Simmons. "We considered Gear Grinder a preseason game. We consider Raw Deal a regular-season game. There's still a long season to go." In February, agents from his office traveled to Beijing to meet with their Chinese counterparts. "They said, 'Give us what you know,' " says Simmons. "We'll prosecute and arrest for you." The Americans told the Chinese agents about the 37 factories they had identified as sources. Seven months later, Simmons has been told of just one factory's having been closed. As another federal official involved in the case remarks, "China has been very on-again, off-again about its cooperation. You have to remember, its people make a lot of money selling this stuff."

In any event, the doping pipeline is a flexible one. Just as the Chinese filled the vacuum left by Operation Gear Grinder, a break in the Chinese
supply line easily could be filled by suppliers in India, Greece or Russia. From suburban basements and ball fields to antiaging clinics, demand has never been greater. And in a global economy in which a mouse click can connect New Jersey to Northern China, satisfaction is never far away.

Shaun Assael is a senior writer for ESPN The Magazine. He is also the co-author of "Sex, Lies, and Headlocks: The Real Story of Vince McMahon and World Wrestling Entertainment," which is available here. His second book, "Steroid Nation," will be released in October.